jivelikenice wrote:Nivek wrote:A lot of coaches would have looked just fine with Arenas to work with for the 2 and almost a full third season until Gerald Wallace wrecked his knee. From 04-05 until the knee injury, Arenas was among the league's most efficient offensive weapons. Among players who used at least 25% of their team's possessions in those seasons, Arenas ranked 5th in offensive rating behind Dirk, Amare, Ginobili and Ray Allen.
During that time, he edged Kobe, KG, and Lebron in efficiency (among others). Dude could play.
Nobody is doubting Gil could play. I just think that he is overrated by Wizards fans as he was really the only thing that we've had to gloat about in D.C. for some time now. I loved Gil mainly because he was willing to take on the NBA's "Golden Childs" and they couldn't stop him. He could score on anyone at any time. He also played a game that was going to bring excitement, but was never going to translate into very much postseason success. His last year before the knee injury he was shooting 41.8% from the field and was at 35% from the 3 pt line. He didn't really elevate the play of those around him and the persona he created was interfering with his play on the court leading to his injury. If you want to believe he was a championship caliber "A" Star, go right ahead but that wasn't reality in my opinion.
This all goes back to my original premise...Shoot first pgs as your lead player will lead you to more immediate success but they're capped long-term. For all Gill accomplished here, he maxed out at 45 wins. In his first 4 seasons here before the knee injury, the team won 25, 25, 42, & 41 games. In 06-07 he probably would have won more, but before the injury the team was slumping and Gil was benched for that game v. Charlotte.
The problems with the Wizards at that time were not on the offensive end. All of the so-called analysis of their problems that start with offense are simply wrong. They were one of the most efficient offensive teams in the league, and that was in large part because of Arenas and his remarkable ability to use tons of possessions efficiently.
As to the issue of whether or not he made his teammates better -- talk to Larry Hughes, Deshawn Stevenson, Jamison, etc. Talk to Jared Jeffries, who would probably have been out of the league years ago if he hadn't landed with a guy like Arenas who could use so many possessions efficiently that Jeffries' offensive suckitude could be hidden.
That season Arenas got injured, his shooting percentages were down a bit, but he made up for it by getting to the FT line a TON (and making his FTs) and cutting his turnover rate. That season he had an offensive rating of 115 points produced per 100 possessions -- which ranked 31st in the NBA among ALL players with at least 500 minutes, regardless of usage level. Among players with a usage level of 25+ (Gil's was 31.4), he tied for 4th (with Kobe, Pau Gasol and Michael Redd) behind Dirk, Manu and Amare. He was more efficient offensively that season than Ray Allen, Lebron, Wade, Duncan, KG, Paul Pierce, Yao, Carmelo, Joe Johnson, Iverson, etc.
As for whether "shoot first PGs" can be leaders of a championship-level team, we'll see. Miami did it with Wade (and Shaq, of course). The Pistons did it with Isiah (and a bunch of really good players). The Bulls might do it with Rose. I don't think it matters a whole lot who's shooting the ball as long as the team scores efficiently. I think the analysis on this issue is confounded by lots of other factors. And the reality that the team with the best big men is usually the one that wins championships.
The bottom line is that the Wizards definitely had issues that prevented them from making the leap to a title contender while Arenas was in town. None of those issues was Arenas' offensive game, however. He was a HUGE reason they were as good as they were.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell
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